Python events library, heavily inspired by Node.js' EventEmitter.
$ pip install PyEventEmitter
The library provides an EventEmitter class. This class let you bind listeners to events and trigger events.
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.on('hello', hello)
em.emit('hello', who='World') # prints Hello WorldYou can also use on decorator :
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
@events.on(emitter=em, event='hello')
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.emit('hello', who='World') # prints Hello WorldUsing once instead of on may be usefull if you want your
listener to be called once :
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.once('hello', hello)
em.emit('hello', who='World') # prints Hello World
em.emit('hello', who='World') # nothing happensOf course, there is also a decorator for this :
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
@events.once(emitter=em, event='hello')
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.emit('hello', who='World') # prints Hello WorldYou can remove a listener bound to an event :
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.on('hello', hello)
em.remove('hello', hello)
em.emit('hello', who='World') # nothing happensPlease note that this method will remove at moste one listener from the list. If the same listener was bound multiple times to the event, this method has to be invoked multiple times to remove all the occurences.
You can also remove all listeners bound to an event thanks to
remove_all.
The count method returns the number of listeners bound to an event :
import event_emitter as events
em = events.EventEmitter()
def hello(who):
print('Hello {}'.format(who))
em.on('hello', hello)
print(em.count('hello')) # prints 1